Congratulations! I‘m happy that finally the image lost some of the deprecated 
things.

Great work! I could migrate our product today to pharo10 in less than 90 
minutes. While all the time went into docker, jenkins and all the 
infrastructure stuff. Only a single thing I needed to change because my code 
did not handle Deprecations.

I hope we can keep the release cycle as short as this.

Norbert

> Am 05.04.2022 um 12:41 schrieb Esteban Lorenzano <esteba...@netc.eu>:
> 
> 
> Dear Pharo users and dynamic language lovers: 
> 
> We have released Pharo version 10 !
> 
> Pharo is a pure object-oriented programming language and a powerful 
> environment, focused on simplicity and immediate feedback.
> 
> 
> 
> Pharo 10 was a short iteration where we focused mainly on stability and 
> enhancement of the environment :
> 
> Massive system cleanup    
> gained speed    
> removed dead code    
> removed old/deprecated frameworks (Glamour, GTTools, Spec1)
> All Remaining tools written using the deprecated frameworks have been 
> rewritten: Dependency Analyser, Critique Browser, and many other small 
> utilities.
> Modularisation has made a leap, creating correct baselines (project 
> descriptions) for many internal systems, making possible the work and 
> deployment of minimal images.
> Removing support for the old Bytecode sets and embedded blocks simplified the 
> compiler and language core.
> As a result, our image size has been reduced by 10% (from 66MB to 58MB)
> The VM has also improved in several areas: better async I/O support, socket 
> handling, FFI ABI,  
> Even being a short iteration, we have closed a massive amount of issues: 
> around 600 issues and 700 pull requests. A more extended changelog can be 
> found at 
> https://github.com/pharo-project/pharo-changelogs/blob/master/Pharo100ChangeLogs.md.
> 
> While the technical improvements are significant, still the most impressive 
> fact is that the new code that got in the main Pharo 10 image was contributed 
> by more than 80 people.
> 
> Pharo is more than code. It is an exciting project involving a great 
> community. 
> 
> We thank all the contributors to this release:
> 
> Aaron Bieber, Ackerley Tng, Alban Benmouffek, Alejandra Cossio, Aless Hosry, 
> Alexandre Bergel, Aliaksei Syrel, Alistair Grant, Arturo Zambrano, Asbathou 
> Biyalou-Sama, Axel Marlard, Bastien Degardins, Ben Coman, Bernardo Contreras, 
> Bernhard Pieber, Carlo Teixeira, Carlos Lopez, Carolina Hernandez, Christophe 
> Demarey, Clotilde Toullec, Connor Skennerton, Cyril Ferlicot, Dave Mason, 
> David Wickes, Denis Kudriashov, Eric Gade, Erik Stel, Esteban Lorenzano, 
> Evelyn Cusi Lopez, Ezequiel R. Aguerre, Gabriel Omar Cotelli, Geraldine 
> Galindo, Giovanni Corriga, Guille Polito, Himanshu, Jan Bliznicenko, Jaromir 
> Matas, Kasper Østerbye, Kausthub Thekke Madathil, Konrad Hinsen, Kurt 
> Kilpela, Luz Paz, Marco Rimoldi, Marcus Denker, Martín Dias, Massimo 
> Nocentini, Max Leske, Maximilian-ignacio Willembrinck Santander, Miguel 
> Campero, Milton Mamani Torres, Nahuel Palumbo, Norbert Hartl, Norm Green, 
> Nour Djihan, Noury Bouraqadi, Oleksandr Zaitsev, Pablo Sánchez Rodríguez, 
> Pablo Tesone, Pavel Krivanek, Pierre Misse-Chanabier, Quentin Ducasse, 
> Raffaello Giulietti, Rakshit, Renaud de Villemeur, Rob Sayers, Roland 
> Bernard, Ronie Salgado, Santiago Bragagnolo, Sean DeNigris, Sebastian Jordan 
> Montt, Soufyane Labsari, Stephan Eggermont, Steven Costiou, Stéphane Ducasse, 
> Sven Van Caekenberghe, Theo Rogliano, Thomas Dupriez, Théo Lanord, Torsten 
> Bergmann, Vincent Blondeau.
>  
> 
> (If you contributed to Pharo 10 development in any way and we missed your 
> name, please send us an email and we will add you).
> 
> Enjoy!
> 
> The Pharo Team
> 
> Discover Pharo: https://pharo.org/features
> 
> Try Pharo: http://pharo.org/download
> 
> Learn Pharo: http://pharo.org/documentation

Reply via email to